-v r'v 4 ter--"- &ONG OF THE SOUTHERN SOLDIER. DY P. E. C. Tunc -Barclay & Perkins1 Drayman. Vi a soldier you soo that oppression has made I don't light Tor pay or for booty ; llutl wear u iny hut a bluo cockade LUticoil thero by tlio lingers of beauty 'fho south is my home where a black mau is black And a white man tboro is a white man ; !Now I'm tirod ot'Hstening to northern clack Let us 200 what thoy they'll do In a fight man. Tlio Yankees arecut thoy hare managed somohow Theirbusinoss and oura to sottlo: Tlioy make nil wo want from a pin to a plow Now we'll show tliara somo riouthbrn metal. AVo havo had just enough of their northern law That robb'd us so long of our right man And too much of their eursM abolition jaw- Now we'll hco what they'll do in a fight man. Thoir parsons will opon thoir sanctified jaws And cant of our slavo-growing sin sir; Thoy pockotthortf;fa while preaching tho laws And manag'oiour cotton to spin sir. Their incomo.smfo'nicoon our sugar and rice....

!! r -: J y. -y V MfVmM lll""Uii . m Bfi cotton fur cash to tho foreign buyer niiu will thus raise funds amply eutdcient thoj contend for all purposes. I make theao bare statements and I leitve to political economists the discussion of (hu question which may and will arise out of the acts of tho Qorernment of the OonfederUe $tatrs. Tho Southerners argue that b) breaking from thnr unnatural' uiltonewtuh tho Norththoy will aavo upwards uf $47000 000. On tli'8 the North formerly uutdo at least $10000000 by advances interest and exchanges which all came to fully live per cent on tho wholu of tho crop. Again the tariff to raise revenues su'tioient I'or the mnintenuueeof theOoverunuut of the South xjrn Confederacy ia far less than that which Is required by the Government of the U S. The Confederate States propose tp have a tariffjwhich will be about 12 per cent on imports which will yield $25000000. The -Northern tariff is 30 per cent. and us the South took -from the North $70000000 of TO...

T rs; y a -H i 1 f nyi m mil im . u juiaiL-a-am m ltiii ijm.i iiJwwinwBJliJUliiJilw yuuiUiALiLiiMuau namaaataanfimmmmma MACLEOD & DASIIIELL Piiopiuetoks. TEKMS 810 A YEAli -" - iik . . . ' ' JtTL - i . t 1 Stfy'" - r 4-. Dt ? l vlv u 16f VOL. II. Tnti Tub Indian Nations. Thcinhabitantsof tho Indian Territor) tire unmistakably with the'OnfoIerato States in their sympathies and interests. This is rell and wo should by all possible muans meet their advances in the same friendly ypirit that they are mam- fasting. We shall see what sort of n reeop- tion they will give that redoubtable and model U S. Senator l'Gon. Jim Lano" who with his thousand pick i Kansas ruflians it ; reported threaten to overrun Texas and Arkansas 1 Wo are in hopes that tho Lane banditti will make their anpearanco on die Northwestern borders of those States though we hardly tht they will. Lane it isHuU vnt to Kiin&.i8 some time ago sinco vhioh wft havo heard nothing of him If ins power ivnd resources woro e...